Common drugs linked to physical slowdown in elderly

By Staff
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Google Oneindia News

Washington, May 5 : Researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine have found that elderly people who take anticholinergics, a commonly prescribed group of drugs for incontinence, allergy or high blood pressure may experience slowdown in their daily physical activities.

The team discovered that older adults who take the drugs are more likely to be dependent in one or more activities of daily living and to walk slower.

The findings, which involve a class of drugs known as anticholinergic medications, are from the Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory Study (GEMS).

"These results were true even in older adults who have normal memory and thinking abilities," said Kaycee M. Sink, M.D., M.A.S., lead author.

"For older adults taking a moderately anticholinergic medication, or two or more mildly anticholinergic medications, their function was similar to that of someone three to four years older," Sink added.

In a separate study, Sink found that older nursing home residents who took medications for dementia and anticholingeric medications for incontinence at the same time had a 50 percent faster decline in function than those who were being treated only for dementia.

Over a year's time, the decline would represent a resident going from requiring only limited assistance in an activity to being completely dependent, or from requiring only supervision to requiring extensive assistance in an activity.

Sink said that the two studies together suggest that physicians should carefully consider the implications when prescribing anticholingeric medications to older adults.

"Because these medications are so commonly prescribed, older adults who take multiple medications are at increased risk of taking one or more anticholinergic-containing medications," said Sink.

"The potential effects on physical function represent a significant public health problem," Sink added.

Many medications have anticholinergic properties including some for high blood pressure, some antidepressants, most allergy medicines and incontinence medicines. Some of the most common anticholinergics in the GEMS participants include the blood pressure medication nifedipine (Adalat(r) or Procardia(r)), which has mild anticholinergic properties, the stomach antacid ranitidine (Zantac(r)), which has moderate anticholinergic properties, and the incontinence medication tolterodine (Detrol(r)), which is highly anticholinergic.

In the GEMS study, the researchers sought to determine the effects of taking multiple anticholinergic drugs on walking speed and the ability to independently perform activities of daily living such as dressing, personal hygiene, toileting, transferring, bed mobility and eating as well as higher order activities including shopping, cooking, managing money, doing light housework and using a telephone.

The findings are from more than 3,000 people with an average age of 78 years. Almost half (40 percent) of participants were taking more than one anticholinergic drug.

The researchers found that higher anticholinergic burden is associated with worse physical function, both self-reported and performance-based.

The findings appear in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

ANI

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